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Monday, June 22, 2009

Fatherhood -- Sightings

Yesterday was Father's Day, admittedly a lower level Hallmark/parenting holiday as compared to Mother's Day, but enough about that! We had pie yesterday at church, and that was enough for me!!

Today, Martin Marty offers his opinion on religion and fatherhood -- or rather the lack of attention to religion in a 250 page issue of the Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences. Does religion play that small a role in the lives and relationships of fathers, or are these social scientists missing something? Marty offers his thoughts.

*********************************************Sightings -- 6-22-2009

Fatherhood

-- Martin E. Marty

“Fathering across Diversity and Adversity: International Perspectives and Policy Interventions” is the forbidding theme of the fat, 254-page July 2009 issue of The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences (Volume 624). I am a Fellow of the Academy; I have written for The Annals and regularly read it.I was first alerted to the role of religion in fathering by hanging out at the edges of the Institute for American Values (founded and presided over by David Blankenhorn), and learning from scholars such as Morehouse College President Robert M. Franklin.He produced a relevant volume, Crisis in the Village: Restoring Hope in African American Communities, for Emory University’s Center for the Study of Law and Religion.

Now I am going to do something odd for this e-column:suggest that the issue pays too little—in fact, almost no—attention to religious and spiritual elements on this important topic.This observation is uncharacteristic of Sightings.Regular readers know that this snooper, though writing for a publication based in a Center that looks for “public religion,” initially expected to find little material as he scans media for sightings of “religion,” and he was at first surprised to find myriad references to it, in a plenitude of sources offering a plethora of ideas.Sightings is genetically programmed to complain about the complainers who argue that religion is too rarely seen on the public stage.But today, with all due respect, I join them, and wonder:How devote 250-plus pages to fatherhood and have only five (5, V!) one- or two-word mentions of religion? Admittedly, some of the nations they study—especially Scandinavian—are quite secular, but others are religiously-informed and some are hyper-religiously influenced.Was there nothing to talk about and study?

I remember in 1988 when we began “The Fundamentalism Project,” we cited CIA leaders and important figures in State and Defense Departments who admitted that the Iranian Revolution of 1979 caught them by surprise.They monitored everything in Iran except religion, because everyone knew that religion had no power in the modern world.They’ve all “got religion” now.

Asking that religion be noticed is not to point to only salvific, soothing, positive factors.Observe people and cultures getting religion wrong in respect to “fathering” and you will find very, very wrong examples.Yet in the mixed bag of evidence, social scientists can and will find many informative elements.Maybe I am too impressed by what I learn from World Vision and Opportunity International-type emphases to let the presence or absence of religion go unnoticed.Maybe I am too awed by seeing fathers-and-daughters-or-sons in the mix at huge events such as annual “Gospel Fests” in the park under our window.Compensatorily, I admit to being benumbed by much of what Robert Franklin describes as “crisis in the community.”His African-American communities are not alone.There is more to be seen and counted by scholars.Let’s look.

Martin E. Marty's biography, current projects, upcoming events, publications, and contact information can be found at www.illuminos.com.

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In this month’s Religion and Culture Web Forum essay, anthropologist and legal scholar Mateo Taussig-Rubbo examines “how the destruction of property and life seems to [generate] a new form of value,” a value frequently identified as that of the “sacred.” Focusing on the wreckage from and sites of the September 11 attacks, Taussig-Rubbo considers issues of property law and conceptions of sacrifice in an attempt to understand how this concept of sacrality comes to be, and what meanings it holds within American culture.Invited responses will follow from Winnifred Fallers Sullivan, Kathryn Lofton, Jeremy Biles, and Kristen Tobey.